Public domain limitations effectively reduce the market value of the affected properties, sometimes very significantly. However, the right to compensation is not automatic. Case law establishes that general limitations derived from public domain regulations are part of the normal content of the property and do not generate a right to compensation. Compensation is only due in exceptional cases: when there is a singular deprivation of rights that goes beyond the general limitation (for example, a de facto expropriation), when there is a supervening restriction that especially affects your property in a disproportionate manner, or when the administration carries out specific acts that cause individualizable damages.